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WINDER. GEORGIA
BARROW SUPERIOR COURT.
Grand and Traverse Jurcn
1 );•;' II flu' So;v* 01 T tf! ■ ■ '9,
by his Honor Andrew J. < obb,
Ji !jic 1" s;M‘l <•'.-'it, on ‘‘ ('ay
of June. 191?.
Grand Jurors.
J. L. Ihiynio
J. 11. I louv
J. V. Mat !is
li. I). Mo Dp;’aid
('. M. Ferguson
J. A. Robin-. :t.
J. NY. Kilgore
li. L. I foyers
iv V. Ilanligree
John W. I toll
li. A. W. Smith
15. 11. <'rant
\V. 11. Thomas
D. L. Hale
A M. Benton
11. Z. IVi king
J. I*. lioyd
.1 P. Kiev
('. A. I lutohi/is
J. W. Hill
('. li. <’bombers
(!. li. .M>'Ki l -uian
11. Al. Rankin
G. 0. Maddox .
.j. 11. 15e<Mn gih ld
ii. T. Flanigan
T. <'. Full brig l t
W. J. ('r> w
\Y. Pope 11 an i <> in
w. L Hus:
Traverse Jurors—lst Week.
10. K. < ’onk
I/ester i larv <ll
W. \Y. Smith
(’. ('. lions '
.1. I*. < hlnm
J. G. \Y i'Behead
J. \Y. Lackey, Sr.
A. li. Ada >
A. J. St>'vo
S. H. Hailey
11. L. Perry
L. NY. (1 1 izzle
S. M. liootli
NY. C. Roberts
J. 11. G rizzle
J. 11. Mobley, Jr.
NY. Iv Rider
.1. 11. Peppers
I’. ('. Pentecost.
•J. S. Holliday
Ezr:v 15. Adai; s
R. (I. 11. ffison
M. li. Carlyle
NY. !). Hoi
li. li. Woodruff
<!. NY. Dillard
J. R. I'M wards
A. iv (irey oy
J. li. Mas, ’ess
NY. (J. (J raham
lj. K. Herrin
Henry Edgar
J. V. Attoway
J. T. Perry
John Mj; \ey
NY. M. Moxoy
Tabs Jury for Ist Week
J G. Williams
I’, li. Williams
J. <>. NY i ight
T. ,!. Wofford
!>. J. Armstead
NY. A. Maddox
•i. Iv Smith
NY. T. Wall
11. A. Caritbers
J. O. Wages
NY. li. DeLaperrierc
J H. Park
>l. O. tiil es
Iv I) (’i >i >1;
Pert N oaiwuod
Iv S. II oris
J. E. lie. mi
li.C. NYilli'.lmni
15. P :* i \
NY. Al. < . Tieadwcll
J. A. Sjm ns’
15. 11. J; . S..U
S. tKoi • ny
Plvde NYiliiamson
Traverse Jurors—2nd Week.
/ F. Jackson
K. Y. Ilurdigree
J. T Hay;.aid
Iv S. I Jewett,
NY. J. Ilaynie,
J. .\. Ki iivei.se,
NN . 11. I is
A. I). Mincev,
A. J. Maymon,
L. hi. Dunahoo,
T. 11. Ma:;ev.
REFLECTIONS tell one of two important
stories—of antiquated household methods
or modern, homekeeping efficiency. The one
means needless overtime and unnecessary labor.
The other means tasks quickly and easily done —
enjoyable work.
Hoosier is the faithful help-mate of a million
and a naif housewives. It is the mixing center,
the labor-saving machine that cuts cookery
work to a minimum. You sit at ease with 40
work-reducing inventions and exclusive con-
W. T. ROBINSON
Telephone 146 'WINDER, GEORGIA
F. M. Stewart,
J. H. Wood,
E. A. Starr.
D .A. Holliday,
J. (!. (’ooper,
NVillie J. Smith,
J. J. Ethridge,
( M. Thompson,
J. A. DeLoy.
R. E. Harmon, *
It. F. Elliott,
J"hi. J. Grave,
NY. < . Maddox,
T. A Hayes.
J. T. 1 lai iisoti,
J. N. Williams,
J. E. Dunahoo,
J. A. Suddath,
(’. 15. Aliuond,
R. L. Forrester,
A. J. Durham,
Earl McDonald,
J. P. Arnold.
J. NY. Grow,
L. J. Dillatd.
7..1is Jurors for Second Week.
J. E. Harbor,
NY. 15. smith,
AY. 11. Hunt,
i). A. St,.i; h,
J. A. Daniel.
J. 11. Jones, Jr.,
J. R. Johnson,
Festus Kinney,
J. E. Everett,
J. NY. Helton, Sr.,
S. E. lludiow,
VY. J. Et!iridge,
1). i>. Kesler,
F. C. Pa tat.
Hoyt Daniel, •
A. J. Hardigree,
V. NY. Cruce,
E. E. DeLaPerriere,
“Saving work is saving
youthfulness”
L. A. Dalton,
A. A. Hill,
G. AY. Hardy,
Wiley Barber,
R. M. Sims.
G. 11. Foster,
NY. Z. mil,
T. A. Deaton,
A. I>. Collins,
Joe E. Wiley,
NY. H. Greesou,
Ernest House,
— * , T
Optimistic Thought
No revenue Is more heroic than that
which torments envy by doing good.
CALOMEL SUITES
10 MAKES TOO
Acts like dynamite on a sluggish
Liver and you lose a
day’s work.
i'here's no reason why a person
ill > ii<l t axe sic kening, salivating cal
omel when a few cents buys a large
bolile ol Dodson's Inver Tone—a
I ,'riect substitute for calomel.
It is a pleasant, vegetable liquid
which will start your liver just as
surely as calomel, but it doesn’t
make you sick and can not salivate.
Children and grown folks can take
Dodson’s Liver Tone, because it is
perfectly harmless.
Calomel is a dangerous drug. It
is mercury and attacks your bones.
I'ake a dose of nasty calomel today
and you will feel weak, sick and
nauseated tomorrow. Don’t lose a
day’s work. Take a spoonful of
Ikxlson slaver Tone instead and
you will wake up feeling great. No
more biliousness, constipation, slug
gishness, headache, coated tongue or
sour stomach. Your druggist save if
yon don’t find Dodsop’s Liver Tone
.acts better than horrible calomel
TO ur money is waiting for you.
THE BARROW TIMES
veniences before you. Within easy reach are
all needed utensils and supplies. Work becomes
play.
You should know the Hoosier intimately, how
it will render valuable aid and make the kitchen
more attractive. We will gladly demonstrate
every feature for you and show you the many
Hoosier models.
We invite every housewife to our Hoosier de
partment. A visit will be well worth while.
Come. See the Hoosier. Note the moderate
prices and convenient terms. Then decide.
A Fine Farm for
SALE
Near Winder
✓
\
We aave for sale a fine farm of 149 acres
five miles out from Winder, on the Public
Higeway to Jefferson.
This farm has a nice 6-room residence
and two 3-room dwellings.
This price and cerms make this an at
tractive proposition and you have an oppor
tunity that is seldom offered for so desirable
a farm.
Lamar & Perry
Winder, Georgia
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4,
MR. DAVIS IN THE RACE.
To Tlie Editor of The Dublin
Courier-Herald: I have just read
with interest a statement purport
ing to be from Mr. ♦*. M. Duke, of
Flovilla, and published in August
26th issue of The Telegraph, in
which lie states that 1 have with
drawn my name as a prospective
candidate'for the office of attor
ney-general because of the ex
pense necessary to make the cam
paign. (
These statements are absolutely
untrue. If Mr. Duke made these
statements, he did so without au
thority from me, and without the
slightest reason to justify them. If
there is an error in reporting his
statements, I trust that he will as
sist in immediately correcting the
error.
I will be a candidate for the offi
ce of attorney-general of Georgia
in 1920. I will make the formal an
nouncement at the proper time. I
will enter the race with sufficient
energy and finances to stay in it
until the close. My friends over
Georgia are already' expecting me
to be in that campaign. I will en
ter it to win honorably, and will
make no attempt to place any man
who should oppose i*e in a false
light before the people of the state
I am sorry that it has become
necessary for me to make this
statement at this time. Because I
believe it is in itself an informal
announcement, and any announce
ment at this time for this office is
premature. But I trust that you
will give space in your paper for
this letter, as I have many friends
in Georgia that might take the
statement reported to have been
made by Mr. Duke seriously.
GEORGE B. DAVIS.
EIGHT RULES FOR MAKING
GOOD BUTTER AT HOME
Among the essential items that
should not be overlooked by the
home butter maker, according to
the Dairy Department of the New
\ ork State College of Agriculture,
are the following: ,
1. AIL the utensils should be
washed carefully, and after being
thoroughly scalded should be plac
ed in a dustless and flyles.s atmos
phere. More harm than good is
done by the old custom of placing
the pails, dippers, and other uten
sils in the sun, for not more than
once in one thousand times are
these utensils placed where dust
and flies do not lodge on them.
2. Use good judgement in keep
ing the milk clean.
3. Skim or separate a cream that
will test about 30 per cent fat. If
too thin, it will churn with diffi
culty.
4. Add about one quart of but
termilk to ten quarts of cream to
sour it. Hold the cream at a tem
perature of about 70 degrees F.
until it has a mild acidity.
5. ( burn at such a temperature
that the churning process will re
quire irom 30 to 45 minutes. In
small churns the necessary tem
peratures are usually from 58 to
65 degrees F. The churns should
be stopped when the granules are
about the size of a kernel of wheat.
6. Draw off the buttermilk and
then wash with about as much wa
ter as there was cream, at a tem
perature of from 52 degrees to 56
degrees F. Revolve the. churn two
or three times and drain. Then re
peat the washing. The purpose of
washing is to carry away the but
termilk on which bacteria live.
This improves the keeping proper
ties of the butter.
7. Salt and work the butter. It is
much easier to distribute the salt
when the butter is rather plastic
than when it is cold and hard.
Therefore, observe temperature
control. Work the butter until ex
perience tells you that mottles will
not appear.
8. Pack in a carefully scalded
and cooled jar or other container.
If the butter is sold, one pound
prints are very acceptable to the
trade. These prints should be
wrapped in butter parchment.—
The Progressive Farmer.